I'm trying to make a wavetable synthesizer in Python for the first time (based off an example I found here https://blamsoft.com/tutorials/expanse-creating-wavetables/) but the resultant sound I'm getting doesn't sound tonal at all. My output is just a low grainy buzz. I'm pretty new to making wavetables in Python and I was wondering if anybody might be able to tell me what I'm missing in order to write an A440 sine wavetable to the file "wavetable.wav" and have it actually produce a pure sine tone? Here's what I have at the moment:
import wave
import struct
import numpy as np
frame_count = 256
frame_size = 2048
sps = 44100
freq_hz = 440
file = "wavetable.wav" #write waveform to file
wav_file = wave.open(file, 'w')
wav_file.setparams((1, 2, sps, frame_count, 'NONE', 'not compressed'))
values = bytes(0)
for i in range(frame_count):
for ii in range(frame_size):
sample = np.sin((float(ii)/frame_size) * (i+128)/256 * 2 * np.pi * freq_hz/sps) * 65535
if sample < 0:
sample = 0
sample -= 32768
sample = int(sample)
values += struct.pack('h', sample)
wav_file.writeframes(values)
wav_file.close()
print("Generated " + file)
The sine function I have inside the for loop is probably the part I understand the least because I just went by the example verbatim. I'm used to making sine functions like (y = Asin(2πfx)) but I'm not sure what the purpose is of multiplying by ((i+128)/256) and 65535 (16-bit amplitude resolution?). I'm also not sure what the purpose is of subtracting 32768 from each sample. Is anyone able to clarify what I'm missing and maybe point me in the right direction? Am I going about this the wrong way? Any help is appreciated!